Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a son on DCE. We pay the tryout fee, just like we do for travel hockey (which is actually more). No big deal to me. They have a biz to run. Btw, we have never done clinic either. Not sure the big deal. Seems pretty consistent w our experience across all my kids and other sports.
You are a sucker. Other clubs charge between $0 and $50 for a tryout. They are greedy guys. Kind of like the circus moving from town to town. St. Andrew's, St. John's, Bullis, Prep and now Churchill.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a son on DCE. We pay the tryout fee, just like we do for travel hockey (which is actually more). No big deal to me. They have a biz to run. Btw, we have never done clinic either. Not sure the big deal. Seems pretty consistent w our experience across all my kids and other sports.
You are a sucker. Other clubs charge between $0 and $50 for a tryout. They are greedy guys. Kind of like the circus moving from town to town. St. Andrew's, St. John's, Bullis, Prep and now Churchill.
Anonymous wrote:I have a son on DCE. We pay the tryout fee, just like we do for travel hockey (which is actually more). No big deal to me. They have a biz to run. Btw, we have never done clinic either. Not sure the big deal. Seems pretty consistent w our experience across all my kids and other sports.
Anonymous wrote:Yep nothing to see here. Go somewhere else where you kid might be able to make the team.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The poor kids as in the sons of the families who were duped. Seriously, you are defending paying $300 for a tryout?
The reality is that making the roster of a high level club in any sport is difficult because you must REPLACE someone on the the current roster who is already proven - you have to bring something special to replace someone already there.
Align your club try out choices with this reality and your son's skill set by talking to the coaches BEFORE you attend any tryout to get a realistic view of open roster spots and what they are looking for by position. i would not complain about the business model.
There are plenty of lax clubs out there to choose from so pick one that is a good match.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not quite sure how to make it better. I'd love for my boys to stay in rec leagues but it's just not competitive enough for them. The problem also is the year around commitment. I know it's to help line the pockets of the club owners but if you aren't a parent of it, you really do feel left out.
Anonymous wrote:
Shelling out $3000 for team fees + $500 for tryout prep/tryouts..... What are you paying for??
I agree that a lot of this spending is over the top. Especially when you include travel costs on top of team fees. However, I think you are discounting how important it is for some, not all, of these players to compete with their friends. My son has a better chance of playing college football than lax. He and his club lacrosse teammates are all at different schools now, but they have grown up playing together and they have a ton of fun at the tourney's. Personally, that alone is worth the money. The boys also love their coach, a former D1 player, not a Dad.
Shelling out $3000 for team fees + $500 for tryout prep/tryouts..... What are you paying for??